Skip to main content

Privacy Policy






We respect the right to Privacy of each and every individual. We are esteemed by the relationship and by becoming our clients you have a promise from our side that we shall remain loyal to all our clients/students (if any) and non-clients whose information resides with us. This Privacy Policy of www.joymukherjee.com applies to the current clients as well as former clients. 
Below are the word-by-word credentials of our Privacy Policy: The only use we will be bringing to your information will be for providing the services to you for which you have subscribed to us for which you gave us your information. Your information given to us represents your identity with us. If any changes are brought in any of the fields of which you have provided us the information, you shall bring it to our notice by either calling us or dropping a mail to us. Further, you agree and understand that all services provided are non-refundable and that you should carefully consider whether our services/training are able to meet your needs. By subscribing to our services/training (if any) you consent to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.


More Articles For You >>

The Cautionary Tale of OptionSellers.com and James Cordier

At first glance, selling options can look like a great way to earn steady income. The idea is simple: you collect premiums upfront by betting that the options you sell will expire worthless. If that happens, you keep the premium and walk away with a profit. It sounds easy and low-risk—almost like free money. But behind the promise of consistent returns lies a level of risk that many underestimate. One of the most infamous examples of this is the collapse of OptionSellers.com , a firm run by James Cordier , which blew up in spectacular fashion in November 2018. This article breaks down what went wrong and the important lessons every trader can take from it. What Is Option Selling, and Why Is It Risky? Selling options means writing contracts (calls or puts) and receiving a premium in return. You're essentially making a bet that the market won’t move past a certain price. If you're right, the options expire worthless, and you keep the money. For example, if you sell a call o...

🟣 Implied Volatility: Calculate the Price Range of a Stock

  How can I understand how far a stock is likely to move?                                                                                                                                              The statistical distribution of prices :: Normal distribution & Log-normal distribution Normal Distribution gives equal chance of prices occurring either above or below the Mean (which is shown here as 0). We are going to use normal distribution for simplicity’s sake. If a price distribution is considered Normal , 68.20% of the time, you will be within 1 standard deviation. ...